How Customer Due Diligence Led to a 30% Reduction in Offer Price

The core of any business is its customers. Their loyalty, and perception of the business can tell you as much or more than financial records about the company outlook.

Customer due diligence — the process of gathering insight on the stability of customer relationships — is a powerful way to determine whether an acquisition is likely to succeed, and map out challenges to address during integration.

We recently worked with a multibillion-dollar packaging company to conduct customer due diligence on a prospective acquisition in an emerging market. The acquisition would enable the strategic acquirer to enter a new geographic area in lieu of executing a more costly greenfield ‘build’ strategy.

This case study reveals just how important robust customer due diligence is before finalizing an offer and integration roadmap.In this case example, the due diligence enabled the acquirer to decrease its offer price by 30%.

Here’s the background: the acquiring company perceived the potential acquisition as a leader in its specific geographic markets, with a reputation of good quality, reliable deliveries, and a well-respected team.

But the acquiring company also knew that nearly 50% of the target’s revenues were associated with four key accounts — a concerning degree of customer concentration. For this and other reasons, the acquirer wanted to assess the strength of customer relationships more fully.

Their main questions included:

Are there any other negative tipping points that would decrease the value of the deal?

How stable are these four main customer relationships?

Is there still more growth to be had from those few customers?

The company engaged our firm to conduct a customer satisfaction survey with the target’s top accounts, banking on the belief that customers would be more open and responsive with a third party.

The survey revealed mixed results — some customers were delighted, while others were on the verge of taking their business elsewhere. One positive finding was that the target excelled in providing dependable account management to customers.

However, a number of concerns surfaced from the survey.

The target’s competition was making inroads: An increasing number of high-quality, lower-priced competitors — both local and international — were infringing on the target’s market share. Customers perceived product quality from these competitors to be advancing (and similar to the target’s quality) — but competitors’ pricing was 15-20% less.

The target’s customer service was inflexible: Customers saw the target as rigid, especially as compared to competitors. As one customer said, “We are their key customers, but we don’t feel like that. Their competitors will bend over backwards and will find a solution. With them, it’s take it or leave it.”

The target lacked innovation: Feedback showed that customers believed the organization as a whole lacked innovation and speed to market. The survey led the acquiring company to realize that the target had not developed a solid strategy to address the commoditization of its product at the customer level.

The target’s NPS was very low: Another important part of the due diligence process was assessing Net Promoter Score (NPS) ratings for the target’s key accounts. (NPS is a customer loyalty metric that hinges on asking customers, “How likely is it that you would recommend this company/product/service to a friend or colleague?”) The target’s NPS was 7%, a very low score reflecting a business with serious issues for its account base. More distressing, the score with the target’s top four accounts (those equaling 50% of gross revenues) was even lower: -17%.

Overall, customer feedback clearly revealed that the target’s value was not as robust as initially perceived. Based on these findings, the potential acquirer decided to reduce their offer price by 30% in addition to restructuring some other terms of the deal that would impact the longterm relationship. Importantly, they also implemented their detailed assessment of customer needs and expectations going forward into their integration roadmap, to be addressed after the deal, giving the acquirer a fast-track to improvements needed to secure the customer revenue stream.

“The outside feedback from the survey helped verify suspicions and intuitions in a more honest way than one-on-one [conversations],” said the lead integration executive and vice president of the acquiring company. “The study uncovered strengths and weaknesses so we’re not going in blind and can understand how to… clean up issues and build on strengths.”